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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Ionospheric Gradients Estimation and Analysis of S-Band Navigation Signals for NAVIC System

TLDR
S-band signals of NAVIC are used for the first time to investigate ionospheric gradients over low-latitude region and it is evident that RLS model can estimate ionospherical gradients for a single NAVIC station.
Abstract
Navigation with Indian constellation (NAVIC) is the operational name given to the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System developed by the Indian Space Research Organisation, India. The most influential factor is ionospheric gradients that can degrade the positional accuracy of the global navigation satellite system users especially in low-latitude regions. The main aim of this paper is to estimate the ionospheric gradient variations obtained from the NAVIC receiver located at Guntur, India (16.23° N, 80.44° E). Code and carrier phase measurements of S-band (2492.028 MHz) signals are used to derive ionospheric time delays and total electron content (TEC) values. In this paper, S-band signals of NAVIC are used for the first time to investigate ionospheric gradients over low-latitude region. The recursive least squares (RLS) algorithm is implemented as a single frequency ionospheric model for estimating the absolute TEC, and longitudinal (E–W) and latitudinal (N–S) ionospheric gradients. Ionospheric gradient analysis has been carried for three consecutive days during September equinox, December solstice in 2016, and for a geomagnetic disturbed event observed during May 2017. The annual statistical analysis in the periodic structure of spatial ionospheric gradients from NAVIC S-band signals during June 2016–May 2017 is also discussed. It is evident that RLS model can estimate ionospheric gradients for a single NAVIC station. The outcome of this work would be useful for understanding ionospheric irregularities climatology over low-latitude region.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A New Ionospheric Model for Single Frequency GNSS User Applications Using Klobuchar Model Driven by Auto Regressive Moving Average (SAKARMA) Method Over Indian Region

TL;DR: The experimental results of SAKARMA for NavIC have revealed that the MAPE for proposed SAKarMA model is 9-17% (accuracy: 83-91%), while 34-53% (Accuracy: 47-66%) for the Klobuchar model, illustrating that the proposed SakARMAmodel is capable of predicting the ionospheric delays for single frequency GNSS/NavIC users.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of the relationship between the spatial gradient of total electron content (TEC) between two nearby stations and the occurrence of ionospheric irregularities

TL;DR: In this paper, the relation between the occurrence of ionospheric irregularities and the spatial gradient of total electron content (TEC) derived from two closely located GNSS receivers located within the equatorial region, over Ethiopia, during the postsunset hours was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

ED‐ConvLSTM: A Novel Global Ionospheric Total Electron Content Medium‐Term Forecast Model

TL;DR: In this article , an encoder-decoder structure with a convolution long short-term memory (ED-ConvLSTM) network was proposed to forecast global total electron content (TEC) based on the International GNSS Service (IGS) TEC maps from 2005 to 2018 with 1-hr time cadence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carrier-Aided Dual-Frequency Vectorized Tracking Architecture for NavIC Signals

TL;DR: In this paper , a carrier-aided dual-frequency vectorized tracking (CA-DFVT) architecture for the Navigation with Indian Constellation (NavIC) is presented, which uses the precise carrier phase measurements from the S-band signal and the unambiguous code phase measurement from the L5 signal to form a new measurement model for the EKF to estimate the position, velocity, and time (PVT) solutions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of Ionospheric Vertical Delay at S1 and L5 Frequencies, Based on Thick-Shell Model Using NavIC System, for Mid Latitude Region of India

TL;DR: In this paper, the vertical ionospheric delay of the Indian NavIC system at S1 (2492.028 MHz) and L5 (1176.45 MHz) frequencies has been investigated.
References
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Detection of plasma bubble in ionosphere using GPS receivers in Southeast Asia

TL;DR: In this paper, the 2D structure of the equatorial plasma bubble (PBB) using high-density GPS receivers in Southeast Asia was observed using GPS data collected from 127 GPS receivers with the spacing distances of 30-120 km from each other.
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